The Shibboleth of Productivity: The Exhaustion of Industrial-Age Strategies in Post-Industrial Society
The universal demand currently to resolve America's economic decline by increasing productivity fatally misconstrues the actual challenge posed by post-industrial society. Automation, rationalization, and technological advances suggest a crisis not of productivity, but of distribution, a false, unnecessary perpetuation of widespread deprivation required only by the scarcity model underpinning market economics. While enforced by vested interests for personal gain, this pseudo-crisis is ironically acceeded to by the Left, which-together with most others-betrays a deep foreboding about the prospect of a post-work society. The path to a post-market economy and society can only be found by forging a popular post-work culture and economic structure rooted in effective post-scarcity incentives. This paper offers a framework for both.
Year of publication: |
1985
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Authors: | Block, James E. |
Published in: |
Review of Radical Political Economics. - Union for Radical Political Economics. - Vol. 17.1985, 1-2, p. 157-185
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Publisher: |
Union for Radical Political Economics |
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